Last I saw they also have info on a 2nd shooter- a female who happens to be Asian (a name was listed but I've forgotten it and closed the site a while ago) as well as info for 2 cars and license plates #s. Still no info on why or motive.

Realizing this is still a very fluid situation, but as of yet she hasn't been identified as a shooter. She's been identified as the (so far) lone shooter's wife, and police have located her and both vehicles.

We have friends who went to Las Vegas and arrived there last night. They still haven't checked in on social media or with anyone that we know of who knows them. I'm sure they're fine but I cannot believe we even have to be concerned.

News reports on NPR this morning have been saying more than 400 were taken to hospitals, and more than 50 dead. Unbelievable. Also the undersheriff has called it domestic terrorism, and said he would call it that "all day," because that's what it is.

NPR article here (doesn't include the quote as of now.). Article is being updated. They say the article is focused on reporting information from law enforcement and government sources so that they don't spread as much inaccurate info.

I think it is too late by about a decade or so. Not sure when but some time in the past we reached the point of collectively shrugging our shoulders and acting like mass shootings are simply natural disasters like tornado or hurricanes where all you can do is react to them when they happen.

According to the Washington Post, an ISIS group is claiming responsibility for the attack,saying that the shooter was a recent convert. However, the FBI is saying there's no known connection so far, and while they will follow itup, it seems likely to be an opportunistic false claim.

The Post is also citing numbers of at least 58 dead and 515 injured. It's not known how many of the injuries (or presumably deaths) were caused by bullet wounds, versus being a result of the panic. (Which would not make the shooter any less responsible, of course.)

The grim predictability of stock-market reactions to U.S. mass shootings—where before a final tally of casualties can be reached, shares of gun makers rise—continued Monday in the wake of a Las Vegas attack that killed at least 50 and wounded hundreds more.

I think it is too late by about a decade or so. Not sure when but some time in the past we reached the point of collectively shrugging our shoulders and acting like mass shootings are simply natural disasters like tornado or hurricanes where all you can do is react to them when they happen.

We didn't do anything when 6YOs got shot to pieces in their classroom. I've given up hope we'll do anything in my lifetime. Maybe in my daughter's. Maybe.

We didn't do anything when 6YOs got shot to pieces in their classroom. I've given up hope we'll do anything in my lifetime. Maybe in my daughter's. Maybe.

Yeah, as a nation it's been accepted that there's no level of gun violence high enough to say that enough is enough and actually try to stop it. The pro-gun side won, and the rest of us are stuck paying the butcher's bill.

Yesterday was the two year anniversary of the shooting at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg. At the time it happened, a lot of people here, in the actual community where the shooting occurred, were more worried that this was going to be used by Obama to take away everyone's guns than the fact that nine people who lived hear were just murdered.